A review on the wettability of dental implant surfaces I: Theoretical and experimental aspects

The surface wettability of biomaterials determines the biological cascade of events at the biomaterial/host interface. Wettability is modulated by surface characteristics, such as surface chemistry and surface topography. However, the design of current implant surfaces focuses mainly on specific mic...

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Veröffentlicht in:Acta biomaterialia 2014-07, Vol.10 (7), p.2894-2906
Hauptverfasser: Rupp, Frank, Gittens, Rolando A., Scheideler, Lutz, Marmur, Abraham, Boyan, Barbara D., Schwartz, Zvi, Geis-Gerstorfer, Jürgen
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container_end_page 2906
container_issue 7
container_start_page 2894
container_title Acta biomaterialia
container_volume 10
creator Rupp, Frank
Gittens, Rolando A.
Scheideler, Lutz
Marmur, Abraham
Boyan, Barbara D.
Schwartz, Zvi
Geis-Gerstorfer, Jürgen
description The surface wettability of biomaterials determines the biological cascade of events at the biomaterial/host interface. Wettability is modulated by surface characteristics, such as surface chemistry and surface topography. However, the design of current implant surfaces focuses mainly on specific micro- and nanotopographical features, and is still far from predicting the concomitant wetting behavior. There is an increasing interest in understanding the wetting mechanisms of implant surfaces and the role of wettability in the biological response at the implant/bone or implant/soft tissue interface. Fundamental knowledge related to the influence of surface roughness (i.e. a quantification of surface topography) on titanium and titanium alloy surface wettability, and the different associated wetting regimes, can improve our understanding of the role of wettability of rough implant surfaces on the biological outcome. Such an approach has been applied to biomaterial surfaces only in a limited way. Focusing on titanium dental and orthopaedic implants, the present study reviews the current knowledge on the wettability of biomaterial surfaces, encompassing basic and applied aspects that include measurement techniques, thermodynamic aspects of wetting and models predicting topographical and roughness effects on the wetting behavior.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.actbio.2014.02.040
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source MEDLINE; Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Contact angle hysteresis
Dental Implants
Humans
Hydrophilicity
Microscopy, Electron, Scanning
Roughness induced wetting
Surface energy
Surface Properties
Thermodynamics
Wettability
title A review on the wettability of dental implant surfaces I: Theoretical and experimental aspects
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